cam, i haven't been following this thread - excuse me if these suggestions
have been made.
it sounds like you're using two cards based on rtl8129, right?
1. get one up and running during boot. can you modprobe the 2nd card once
linux gets running? if so, just add your modprobe to a local startup
script.
2. if you want something working for the here and now, try putting in a
different 2nd card.
i can think of a couple of pitfalls with having two cards that use the same
driver in the same system. like if the two cards use different I/O
addresses, perhaps the one with the "higher" address won't be found. don't
know how driver authors get around stuff like that...
but considering you can get a nice kne based card for under 15 bucks, you
may want to consider whimping out and getting a different card.
btw, my firewall uses two kingston cards, so it's possible. the tulip is an
old driver though, and rtl is still "experimental" whatever that means.
peter
On Thu 07 Dec 00, 10:58 AM, Cam Ellison said...
> Roland Minden wrote:
> >
> > >From root on the command line enter
> > lspnp | less
> > this should give you information on your NIC.
> > What Distro are you using?
> > Rusty
>
> Thanks, Rusty
>
> I'm using Debian (potato), kernel 2.2.17.
>
> lspnp produces an empty file
> pnpdump says there are no cards
> the kernel cannot find the card, even though lilo.conf has the command
> append="ether=0,0,eth1", which is supposed to force a search for
> additional cards. The BIOS says the card is there, but the manufacturer
> number is different from what I think it should be (but what do I know?)
>
> Cheers
>
> Cam
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